Last updated: May 14, 2026
“Ghost surgery” is commonly used by patients to describe a situation where the person expected to perform a surgery is not the person who actually performs it. Foreign patients should treat this as a consent and documentation issue, not as something to resolve after travel.
Quick answer
Before surgery, ask for written confirmation of who will consult, operate, assist, provide anesthesia, and handle follow-up. If the clinic cannot document responsibility clearly, pause before paying or signing consent forms.
What to compare
| Comparison point | What to confirm |
|---|---|
| Surgeon identity | Ask which licensed professional is responsible for the surgery and whether any part may be delegated. |
| Consent form | Make sure the procedure, risks, anesthesia plan, and provider responsibility are explained in a language you understand. |
| Operating-room changes | Ask what happens if the named doctor is unavailable on the day of surgery. |
| Records after surgery | Ask what operation note, medication list, and follow-up instructions you can receive. |
| Dispute pathway | Save messages, quotes, consent forms, receipts, and provider names before and after surgery. |
Questions to ask before booking
- Who is the named doctor responsible for my surgery?
- Will the same doctor who consults me perform the key parts of the procedure?
- Can any part of the procedure be delegated, and how is that disclosed?
- Who provides anesthesia or sedation, and what monitoring is used?
- Can I receive a copy of my consent form and treatment summary?
- What should I do if the procedure plan changes on the day of surgery?
Red flags
- The consultation focuses on price and before-after photos but avoids provider responsibility.
- The clinic says the doctor name cannot be confirmed until the day of surgery.
- Consent is rushed, untranslated, or signed after sedating medication is discussed.
- The clinic refuses to provide basic records after treatment.
- A coordinator promises outcomes that are not written in medical documents.
FAQ
Is every team-based surgery a ghost-surgery problem?
No. Team care can be normal. The key issue is whether roles are disclosed, consented to, and documented.
What documents should I save?
Save quote messages, doctor names, consent forms, receipts, aftercare instructions, medication names, and any written changes to the plan.
Can Med-in-Korea investigate a specific clinic?
No. This guide is educational. For disputes or suspected illegal conduct, use official Korean support and dispute resources.
Related Med-in-Korea guides
- Plastic Surgery in Korea: Safety Questions Foreigners Should Ask
- Korea Clinic Safety Checklist for Foreign Patients
- Before You Pay a Korean Clinic Deposit: 20 Questions to Ask
Official sources to save
- Medical Korea patient-safety and reliability information
- Medical Korea illegal foreign-patient attraction report center
- Korea Medical Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Agency
- Medical Korea support and information center
Med-in-Korea note: This guide is general educational information. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, treatment recommendation, legal advice, clinic verification, or a substitute for consultation with qualified medical, dental, travel, or legal professionals. Med-in-Korea does not rank, recommend, book, represent, or verify individual clinics.